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An Iranian official warned that any European countries that enter the conflict against Iran will become ‘legitimate targets’ for Tehran’s retaliation. 

Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister Majid Takht-Ravanchi made the remark to France24 as Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian on Saturday apologized to neighboring countries that have been attacked by the regime. 

‘We have already informed the Europeans and everybody else that they should be careful not to be involved in this war of aggression against Iran,’ Takht-Ravanchi told the network. ‘If they help, I’m not trying to name any country, but if any country joins in the aggression against Iran, joins America and Israel in the aggression against Iran, definitely they will be also the legitimate targets for Iranian retaliation.’ 

‘This war has imposed on us, and we will continue to defend ourselves to the best of our abilities,’ he added. ‘We have an obligation to defend our people and that is what exactly we are doing.’

Takht-Ravanchi also claimed Iran was ‘negotiating in good faith‘ in talks with the U.S. about its nuclear program, before America launched Operation Epic Fury and Israel began Operation Roaring Lion on Feb. 28. 

‘We are sincere. We are sincere in our endeavor to arrive at a peaceful conclusion of this issue,’ he told France24. 

Pezeshkian said Saturday that any future attacks coming out of Iran would only be in response to attacks against the country. 

‘I should apologize to the neighboring countries that were attacked by Iran, on my own behalf,’ he said, according to The Associated Press. ‘From now on, they should not attack neighboring countries or fire missiles at them, unless we are attacked by those countries. I think we should solve this through diplomacy.’

Pezeshkian made the apology during a prerecorded televised speech on Saturday after Iran launched repeated strikes on Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Oman. 

Despite the vow, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) Ministry of Defense said on Saturday that the country’s air defense systems intercepted 16 ballistic missiles, 15 of which were destroyed while one fell into the sea.

Fox News Digital’s Elizabeth Pritchett and The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Gulf states intercept hundreds of Iranian missiles and drones, issue joint condemnation with US
Gulf states intercept hundreds of Iranian missiles and drones, issue joint condemnation with US
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Shohei Ohtani homered again and Japan dug out of an early hole to outlast South Korea for an 8-6 win, improving to 2-0 in the 2026 World Baseball Classic.

Korea jumped on Japan starter Yusei Kikuchi for three runs in the top of the first on four hits, but Seiya Suzuki hit a two-run homer in the bottom of the opening inning at the Tokyo Dome that instantly cut the deficit. The Koreans held that 3-2 lead into the fourth, when Ohtani hit a solo home run off Korea’s Young Pyo Ko to tie the game, the four-time MVP’s second homer in as many games in this WBC.

Two batters later, Suzuki connected on his second home run of the game, giving Japan a 4-3 lead. Byeong Hyeon Jo replaced Ko on the mound and Korea’s new pitcher was greeted with a solo Masataka Yoshida home run for Japan’s third longball of the inning.

But Korea tied the game right back up in the top of the fifth on a two-run homer by Los Angeles Dodgers infielder Hyeseong Kim. The game stayed tied 5-5 until the bottom of the seventh, when Japan played three on Suzuki’s RBI walk and Yoshida followed with a single that scored two more.

Taisei Ota pitched the ninth inning to get the save for Japan.

Japan will face fellow unbeaten Australia (2-0) on Sunday in a game that could decide which country wins Pool C. South Korea (1-1) plays Chinese Taipei (1-2) on Sunday and then Australia in its pool finale on Monday,March 9.

Japan vs South Korea WBC highlights

Shohei Ohtani stats vs Korea

Shohei Ohtani went 2-for-2 with a homer, two walks and three runs scored in Japan’s 8-6 win over Korea on Saturday.

Through two games in the 2026 WBC, Ohtani is 5-for-6 (.833) with two home runs and 6 RBIs. Ohtani was named MVP of the 2023 tournament.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

In what could be the biggest move of the NFL offseason − five days before the official start of free agency − the Las Vegas Raiders agreed to trade perennial Pro Bowl pass rusher Maxx Crosby on March 6 to the Baltimore Ravens in exchange for two first-round draft picks, one in 2026 and the other in ’27, per multiple reports.

The move should immediately restore the Ravens as front-runners in the AFC North and also bona fide Super Bowl contenders after they missed the playoffs in 2025, despite a loaded roster, and fired longtime coach John Harbaugh in the aftermath. As for the Raiders, Crosby’s departure signals their embrace of a needed rebuild − something the franchise wasn’t willing to do a year ago when it hired Pete Carroll in a bid to compete in a loaded AFC West in what was a failed one-season stint for the legendary head coach. Now, the team seems focused on collecting assets in order to forge a supporting cast around its presumed No. 1 draft pick, Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Fernando Mendoza.

How did each club make out? Let’s grade the trade:

Baltimore Ravens’ Maxx Crosby trade grade: A

This is a team that should be in the discussion to win the Lombardi Trophy annually − and usually is. But an organization historically known for suffocating defense lapsed to 24th in 2025, in part due to an injured and ineffective front. Baltimore’s 30 sacks were tied for third-fewest in the league.

But now the Ravens are adding one of the league’s premier pressure players at a time when newly hired head coach Jesse Minter − whose specialty is defense − can deploy Crosby, whom he knows well from their time in the AFC West together. (Minter was most recently the Los Angeles Chargers’ defensive coordinator.) And while Baltimore is paying handsomely, Crosby is under contract through the 2029 season − though doesn’t have any guarantees after the 2026 campaign, effectively making his deal pay-as-you-go at present. His three-year, $106.5 million extension, signed last year, doesn’t even take effect until the 2027 season.

A Pro Bowler each of the past five seasons, Crosby has been beaten up in the last two, missing seven of a possible 34 starts over that stretch. But his production hasn’t suffered much in a span when he’s registered 17½ sacks and 99 QB pressures, per Next Gen Stats. In each of his three full seasons from 2021 to ’23, Crosby never had fewer than 79 pressures or eight sacks in an individual season. Baltimore didn’t have a player with more than five sacks in 2025, and the continued doubt swirling around the future of injured DL Nnamdi Madubuike also surely influenced GM Eric DeCosta’s thinking.

Bottom line, this should be good news for the Ravens, who should be operating from a win-now perspective for the remainder of two-time MVP QB Lamar Jackson’s tenure, and bad news for Patrick Mahomes, Josh Allen, Joe Burrow and the remainder of the AFC. It should also be a sterling opportunity for Crosby − if not a Silver-and-Black one − to legitimately pursue the excellence and ring he’s futilely sought for years in the desert after enjoying just one postseason appearance to date in his first seven NFL seasons.

Las Vegas Raiders’ Maxx Crosby trade grade: A

Crosby has long been a good, loyal soldier to the wayward operation that gave him a chance as a fourth-round pick out of Eastern Michigan in 2019 and stuck by him through substance abuse problems. But it was time for a fresh start for the 28-year-old, who bristled at being shut down by the team late last season, and also the Raiders, who need to quickly build an infrastructure around Mendoza that will help him succeed with a roster in need of many parts and in a division where Las Vegas is clearly fourth of four. Aside from Crosby, the team didn’t appear to have any foundational pieces last season aside from TE Brock Bowers and RB Ashton Jeanty − and neither plays what’s considered a premium NFL position.

As bleak as the Raiders look defensively sans Crosby, they’re nearly as deficient in the receiving corps − no player had as many as 65 catches or 700 yards in 2025 − and, as presently constructed, would have quite a difficult time safeguarding Mendoza.

Obtaining a first-rounder in 2027, which is expected to be one of the most loaded drafts in years, could be the real coup for GM John Spytek and minority owner Tom Brady as they look to restore the Raiders to glory more than 40 years after their most recent Super Bowl triumph. But, sometimes, it seems a Commitment to Excellence can mean a win-win transaction for all parties involved.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Nazem Kadri won a Stanley Cup with the Colorado Avalanche in 2022 and wasn’t re-signed, starting the team’s search for a No. 2 center.

They finally found one at the 2025 NHL trade deadline with Brock Nelson. But now they also have found a Kadri-style player.

Nazem Kadri.

The Avalanche and Calgary Flames worked out a deal to bring back Kadri, giving up only Victor Olofsson off their roster, plus draft picks and an unsigned draft pick. Colorado now has enviable center depth and can trot out Nathan MacKinnon, Nelson, Kadri and fellow 2026 trade deadline acquisition Nicolas Roy.

Here are the winners and losers of the 2026 NHL trade deadline:

WINNERS

Nick Foligno joins brother

Sabres go all-in

The Sabres have been on a roll since Jarmo Kekalainen replaced fired Kevyn Adams as general manager. And the GM took steps to try to help the team end a record 14-season playoff drought. An attempted trade for Colton Parayko didn’t materialize when the defenseman declined to waive his no-trade clause. Kekalainen responded with a trade for the Jets’ Logan Stanley and Luke Schenn, giving Buffalo a rugged third defensive pairing behind an impressive top four that includes Rasmus Dahlin. Sam Carrick was added to improve the team’s league-worst faceoff winning percentage, and depth forward Tanner Pearson also joined. Schenn and Pearson have won Stanley Cup titles, important if the Sabres make a rare foray into the postseason.

Panthers hang on to free agents

The Panthers’ run of back-to-back championships (and three trips to the Final) is heading toward an end because of a string of injuries that include captain Aleksander Barkov tearing his ACL on the first day of fall practice. GM Bill Zito traded pending free agent Petry but held on to free agents Sergei Bobrovsky and A.J. Greer and will try to re-sign them. The Panthers’ core, when healthy, is still championship caliber. If they can’t overcome their deficit, they can heal up and try again next season.

LOSERS

Capitals players devastated

They took it hard when Nic Dowd was dealt to the Golden Knights after being in Washington since 2018-19. Then they woke up Friday morning to find out that 17-year veteran John Carlson was heading to Anaheim after a late-night trade.

‘Today sucks, it’s brutal,’ forward Tom Wilson told reporters. ‘I’m sure there are some guys that want to cry. That’s the reality of it. Today you can cry and tomorrow you got to wake up and be a big boy and go out and play hockey.’

Awkward position for Colton Parayko

Parayko had every right to veto a trade to Buffalo. That’s why agents negotiate no-trade clauses with teams. But the fact that news of the trade leaked made things awkward for the defenseman as he took the time to make a decision on his future.

‘We did some due diligence as soon as that happened,’ general manager Doug Armstrong told reporters, according to the Post-Dispatch. ‘We checked the phone records of all of our staff, texts and emails, and everybody passed the test, not surprisingly. I was disappointed it got out. I know it didn’t come from us.’

Toronto Maple Leafs

The Maple Leafs gave up a first-round pick and a prospect last season to land Scott Laughton and two mid-round picks from the Flyers. Leafs general manager Brad Treliving traded the pending free agent to the Kings on Friday and received a conditional third-round pick. It can become a second-rounder if Los Angeles makes the playoffs.

New CBA rules

The new collective bargaining agreement included a playoff salary cap and rules making it harder for teams to use a second team to retain some salary in a trade. The result: Deadline day was fairly dull until the Kadri trade surfaced.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

HOUSTON — Baseball is rarely easy to predict, and so Lucas Ramirez has made a habit of the next best thing.

In the months leading up to his World Baseball Classic debut for Team Brazil against Team USA, the outfielder ritually practiced affirmations and visualizations to prepare for his entry onto baseball’s international scene.

“Ever since the (WBC) qualifiers, I was envisioning that first at-bat bomb,” Ramirez said. “And it’s crazy that it actually happened. For five months, I’ve been – every time before I go to bed after I pray, I visualize it. And it happened.”  

So when Ramirez rounded the bases at Daikin Park on Friday night after he delivered a leadoff home run in Brazil’s first at-bat of the tournament – one of two solo home runs he hit in the game – he screamed, “I told you!”

“I say go out there with confidence (and) you can do anything you speak,” Ramirez said later. “If you say it out loud, it’ll happen. I’m telling you. It will happen.”

Although Team USA broke the game open in the late innings for a 15-5 win over Brazil, two of Brazil’s youngest players provided the team’s brightest moments.

At 20 years and 49 days old, Ramirez is the youngest player in WBC history with a multi-homer game. His teammate, Brazil pitcher Joseph Contreras, the youngest player in the tournament at 17 years and 291 days old, got USA captain Aaron Judge to ground into an inning-ending double play with the bases loaded.

When asked how that moment ranked in his career, Contreras, a senior at Blessed Trinity Catholic High School in the Atlanta suburbs, said, “That has to be up there. That’s definitely like a top two moment. I would say the first one obviously was winning the state championship back home. There’s nothing better than winning it all.”

Both players represent Brazil because of their mothers’ heritage and are the sons of MLB legends. Ramirez’s father Manny won two World Series titles with the Red Sox and was a 12-time All-Star. Contreras’ father José was a World Series champion with the White Sox in 2005 and an All-Star in 2006.

Both fathers were in the stands at Daikin Park on Friday to watch their sons’ WBC debuts. The performances the sons delivered were proof that they can create their own legacies.

“Having Manny Ramirez as my father is obviously a good thing and a bad thing,” Lucas Ramirez said. “It’s a little hard. Everybody expects so much. That’s why, maybe, I visualize and say things, I guess – because I got to paint my own picture. I got to be Lucas Ramirez, and I got my own path.”

He wasted little time. Judge’s two-run shot in the top of the first inning gave the USA an early 2-0 lead that was halved a short time later.

Leading off the game for Brazil against San Francisco Giants ace Logan Webb, Ramirez deposited a low inside-corner fastball over the wall in right-center field. Feet from where the ball landed, the Brazilian contingent in the home bullpen went berserk, with one reliever even hanging over the fence.  

Besides thinking about hitting a bomb, Ramirez said another thought crossed his mind right before he went up to the plate.

“I’m gonna go out there and give it my all, and I’m just gonna have fun,” he said. “Too many people work on the field and they make baseball their whole life. They have a bad game, and they’re going to have a bad attitude the whole rest of their day. Like, this is temporary. We’re here temporarily, and we’re gonna go out there and have fun and be in life.”

In the top of the second inning, Contreras took over for Brazil starter Bo Takahashi and exacted revenge against Judge, but not before getting into a jam.

After retiring the first batter he faced, Contreras gave up a hard-hit double to Brice Turang and surrendered back-to-back walks to Bobby Witt Jr. and Bryce Harper to load the bases for Team USA’s captain.

Contreras got to a 1-1 count against Judge and threw a two-seamer on the inside of the plate. Judge grounded into a 5-4-3 double play to end the inning. Osvaldo Carvalho, Brazil’s first baseman, pumped his fist wildly while Contreras walked to the dugout and collected high-fives and pats on the back.

“It was just a surreal experience,” Contreras said. “I tried to visualize on that and make sure keep breathing, but as soon as the lights came on and I was on the mound, it was like ‘Alright, now you got to face Byron Buxton. OK, now it’s real.’ Game sped up on me a little bit but now I know for the next time.”

Following his scoreless frame, Contreras allowed two of the next three batters he faced to reach base before Kyle Schwarber scored on a wild pitch and knocked the teenager out of the game with Brazil trailing 3-1. Still, Team USA came away impressed by Contreras’ outing.

“Impressive. I know I wasn’t doing that at that age, that’s for sure,” Judge said. “Just great stuff. I know he had some poise on the mound. He’s throwing up to 100 miles an hour. He’s facing Team USA, a lot of guys he has seen on TV or different things like that. It was just impressive seeing him control himself out there and get out of a big jam.”

In the eighth inning, Ramirez blasted another home run on a one-out pitch from USA reliever Gabe Speier, making the score 8-5.

When Ramirez and Team Brazil manager Yuichi Matsumoto exited the interview room after the game, a Team USA contingent was waiting in the hallway for their turn. USA manager Mark DeRosa told Ramirez, “Way to swing the bat!” Judge shook hands with Ramirez, who in turn asked the three-time American League MVP to take a selfie with him.

Ramirez plays in the Los Angeles Angels organization and spent the 2025 season at the High-A level. Contreras will graduate from high school this spring and is committed to play college ball at Vanderbilt, if he is not drafted by an MLB organization.

Neither has made it to the majors yet, though each inherited certain traits from their dads.

Ramirez mirrors his father’s swing mechanics, though he was taught to hit lefty instead of righthanded. The 20-year-old was drafted in the 17th round in 2024 and last March helped Brazil qualify for the WBC.

The first pitch Contreras learned how to throw was his father’s infamous forkball. The son is 6-foot-4, tall and lanky like his father, and possesses the same quiet confidence.

“Oh man, that kid is something special,” Ramirez said. “Obviously, he comes from a father who plays baseball as well, so that’s been great. That kid’s going to be lights out one day.”

Ramirez regularly takes Christmastime trips to Brazil to visit his grandmother and grandfather, who own a livestock farm there. He said playing for Team Brazil has only strengthened his connection to the country. Ramirez, who speaks fluent Spanish as well as some Portuguese, has asked older players about Brazil’s lone prior WBC appearance in 2013 and been taught by some teammates how to dance to Brazilian funk music.

Friday night’s loss to the USA in pool play left Brazil still searching for its first WBC win after going 0-3 in the 2013 tournament. Brazil is scheduled to play remaining pool games against Italy, Mexico and Great Britain in Houston.

The final scoreline could have been worse, but Team USA’s offense was more junk than juggernaut. Despite Brazil’s pitchers walking 17 batters, hitting two more batters and incurring three pitch clock violations, the Americans hit 5-for-21 with runners in scoring position and stranded 13 baserunners.

What most fans will remember about the night, however, is how two burgeoning stars stole the spotlight from the tournament favorite.

Certainly, Ramirez and Contreras will never forget it. And next time Ramirez goes to visualize his success, he can close his eyes and picture those moments again and again.

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Lindsey Vonn’s time atop the downhill standings is over.

Italy’s Laura Pirovano and Germany’s Emma Aicher bumped the injured Vonn down to third in the season standings after the second downhill at the World Cup in Val di Fassa, Italy. Pirovano now leads the race for the season title after her second downhill win in as many days with 436 points. Aicher is 28 points behind with 408 points.

Vonn, who has 400 points, could slip even further with one race still to go. Germany’s Kira Weidle-Winkelmann (351), Austria’s Cornelia Huetter (344) and Olympic downhill champion Breezy Johnson (333) are also within 100 points of Vonn and could surpass her at the World Cup finals later this month.

Vonn said in an Instagram post Friday, March 6, that she knew this was coming.

‘I didn’t want to win the title to prove anything to anyone. I did it because I knew I could. I just wish I had a chance to fight until the end to try and get it…’ Vonn wrote.

Vonn is currently recuperating from the serious injuries she suffered in a crash during the Olympic downhill last month. She has a complex tibial fracture, a tibial plateau fracture and fractured fibular head, all in her left leg, and also fractured her right ankle.

Vonn also said she had compartment syndrome. If not for her longtime orthopedic surgeon, Dr. Tom Hackett, Vonn said she could have lost her leg.

‘Compartment syndrome is when you have so much trauma to one area of your body, that there’s too much blood, and it gets stuck, and it basically crushes everything in the compartment,’ Vonn said in an Instagram post on Feb. 23. ‘All the muscle and nerves and tendons, it all kind of dies. And Dr. Tom Hackett saved my leg. He saved my leg from being amputated.’

Vonn claimed the No. 1 bib by winning the season’s first downhill, in December. She was on the podium in every downhill race, and took a sizeable lead into the Milano Cortina Olympics.

A season downhill title would have been Vonn’s ninth, tying Mikaela Shiffrin’s record for most in a single discipline. Making it even more remarkable is it would have come at 41, and after Vonn had been retired for almost six years.

Vonn also was skiing with a partial knee replacement, a first for an elite-level skier.

‘At the beginning of the season no one would have ever believed I would be even close to this position. And I bet people would have laughed if it was even suggested. But winning the title was my goal,’ Vonn wrote.

But with four races still left after the Games, the title was still up for grabs and her absence opened the door for other skiers.

Pirovano, who was sixth in the Olympic downhill, made the biggest move, earning 200 points just this weekend with her two wins. Aicher, the silver medalist in Milano Cortina, was poised to take the lead from Vonn after a fourth-place finish last weekend and a second in the first downhill on Friday, March 6. But a 12th-place finish Saturday, March 7, has her chasing Pirovano now.

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No. 20 Miami (Ohio) has finished a perfect regular season, and its athletic director believes it “should cement” the RedHawks as an NCAA Tournament team.

The last remaining undefeated team in men’s college basketball capped off a 31-0 campaign with a wild overtime win against rival Ohio on Friday, March 6. Despite five technical fouls and 14 made 3-pointers from the Bobcats, the RedHawks didn’t falter.

Down by one point with less than 30 seconds left in overtime, star guard Peter Suder drew a foul with 12 seconds left to get to the free throw line. Ohio had a chance to retake the lead in the final seconds, but was unable to get a basket. The RedHawks added a free throw and the Bobcats couldn’t hit the last-second 3-pointer to seal a 110-108 win for the RedHawks.

With the victory, Miami is the fifth team this century to have a perfect regular season, last accomplished by Gonzaga in 2020-21. It also snapped a 14-game losing streak at Ohio, last winning at the Bobcats’ home arena in 2011.

The undefeated record has put the RedHawks at the center of an NCAA Tournament debate, focused on whether the mid-major team needs the automatic bid to get a spot in the big dance.

On the surface, they have the qualifications. A 31-0 record is hard to ignore, and the tournament selection committee has never done so. Since the tournament expanded in 1985, no team with more than 28 wins has ever missed out on March Madness, and a squad with less than four losses has always made it. Now, the most Miami can lose before Selection Sunday is one game.

It’s why athletic director David Sayler said the victory over the Bobcats virtually punches the RedHawks’ ticket to the NCAA Tournament.

“An undefeated season, it has to matter, right?” Sayler told USA TODAY Sports. “Otherwise, why wouldn’t we just play three days in (the MAC tournament) and the winner goes to the (NCAA) tournament and forget the regular season if you’re not going to take an undefeated team?’

“It should cement it,” he added.

However, the argument for Miami’s omission from the bracket is the quality of the resume. Miami doesn’t have any Quad 1 games, just one Quad 2 victory and the majority of its wins come in the Quad 4 category, a 16-0 record. Three victories also came against non-Division I teams.

In KenPom, the RedHawks have a strength of schedule ranking of 285nd out of 365, and the nonconference rating is fifth-worst in Division I. Their rating of 88 puts them around teams that aren’t in the NCAA Tournament at-large conversation. It also hasn’t helped the past three wins were all by one possession.

It’s led to pundits like former Auburn coach Bruce Pearl stating Miami needs the auto-bid or it shouldn’t be in the tournament, resulting in some frustration for those trying to celebrate a historic run.

“It’s disappointing that more people across the country can’t just enjoy a good story,” Sayler said. “They’re on the verge of a historic thing here, and all people try to do is tear them down.”

He pointed to two reasons why people have been trying to discount the program: “Expert” bias toward power conference schools and that fans “can’t sit back and acknowledge” what’s happening, instead making excuses for their teams while belittling others.

“That’s why I’ve been quoting Yoda sometimes, because we’re fighting the evil empire here,” Sayler said. “It’s inevitability. These forces are out there that are against you, and you’re trying to carve a path.”

Still without a loss, Miami is eager to prove its worth. While there’s so much conversation on qualifying for the field of 68, coach Travis Steele has already said the second week of the tournament – the Sweet 16 and Elite Eight – is where the RedHawks want to be. 

Sayler supports the idea, and likes his team’s chances of getting there. There’s still the MAC tournament, which kicks off the quarterfinals on Thursday, March 12 with the championship game two days later. The RedHawks will be the No. 1 seed, and there’s stiff competition challenging to secure the automatic March Madness spot, including defending conference champion Akron.

But it shouldn’t stop the historic RedHawks from dancing.

“We’re not a fluky story,” Sayler said.

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When Benny Sabti was a child growing up in Iran, he remembers receiving an unusual prize at school. ‘For being an excellent student, I received a Persian translation of Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler,’ Sabti told Fox News Digital. ‘They translated Hitler’s book into Persian and distributed it to students.’

The experience stayed with him. Looking back, Sabti, now an Iran expert at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS) in Israel, says it reflected a broader effort by Iran’s ruling clerical establishment to shape how young Iranians viewed politics, religion and the world around them.

Schools, mosques, workplaces and media all became part of an ideological ecosystem designed to reinforce loyalty to the regime. But critics of Iran’s leadership say religion itself was often not the ultimate goal.

‘Faith for them is their tool,’ Banafsheh Zand, an Iranian-American journalist and editor of the Iran So Far Away Substack, told Fox News Digital. ‘It’s not the end all to be all. It’s a tool that they can hide behind so that they can carry out all their criminalities.’

Religion and power

The Islamic Republic was founded on the doctrine of velayat-e faqih, or ‘guardianship of the Islamic jurist,’ which places ultimate political and religious authority in the hands of the country’s supreme leader.

But Zand argues that in practice the system functions less as a purely religious project and more as a mechanism of political control. ‘It’s more like a mafia,’ she said. ‘They use faith in order to keep people down.’

According to Zand, ideology is reinforced through a mix of financial incentives and intimidation. ‘They tried by incentive and money and buying people,’ she said.

Programs tied to the Basij, a militia affiliated with the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), have often provided benefits such as jobs, housing and education to families aligned with the regime.

‘If you are poor and you join the Basij, they give you benefits,’ Zand said. ‘But you have to go along with whatever it is that they offer you.’

Ideology embedded in daily life

Sabti says the Islamic Republic built a vast network designed to reinforce ideology in everyday life. ‘In banks, offices, public spaces and even in the bazaars, regime representatives walk between shops telling people it is time to pray and checking who is not attending,’ Sabti said.

Mosques themselves are closely integrated into the political system. Friday prayer leaders often deliver sermons aligned with government messaging.

‘There are 16 propaganda bodies in Iran,’ Sabti said, describing a network of state institutions responsible for spreading the regime’s interpretation of Islam and the ideals of the Islamic Revolution.

Some institutions also focus on exporting that ideology abroad. ‘There is a university dedicated to converting Sunnis to Shiism,’ he said. ‘They bring people from Africa and South America to Iran, convert them to Shiism and send them back to export the Shiite Islamic revolution.’

Indoctrination in schools

Schools play a central role in the regime’s ideological system.

‘Schools are heavily indoctrinated,’ Sabti said. ‘In civil studies books, Islam was promoted as superior to all other ideologies.’

Religious messaging appears across the curriculum. ‘You cannot separate any school subject from Islam,’ Sabti said. ‘Not history, not geography. Everything is mixed with ideology. The only thing missing was adding it to mathematics.’

For Sabti, the Mein Kampf episode symbolized the ideological environment students were exposed to. The message, he said, reinforced hostility toward perceived enemies and embedded a political worldview from an early age.

Ideology and hypocrisy

Sabti says the credibility of the system is also undermined by the behavior of Iran’s own elites. ‘You can see it in the second generation,’ he said. ‘Their children live abroad while the elites live in palaces in Iran and in other countries. It is hypocrisy.’

Zand says ideology has always been reinforced by intimidation. ‘They make examples out of people in the most vicious possible way,’ she said. ‘It’s fear and manipulation.’

According to Zand, that atmosphere of fear shapes daily life for many Iranians. ‘Everybody is afraid of the police,’ she said. ‘Everybody is afraid of their neighbors.’

An ideology losing its grip

Despite the regime’s extensive ideological machinery, Sabti believes many Iranians never fully accepted the worldview the government tried to impose.

‘Over the years, the indoctrination has stopped working,’ he said. ‘Most of the public does not truly believe it.’

Still, the Islamic Republic remains in power. ‘The regime maintains control through money, weapons and propaganda,’ Sabti said.

Zand agrees the system never fully reshaped Iranian society. Many people, she said, complied outwardly simply to avoid punishment.

‘They won’t have a problem to transfer as long as they realize that the new Iran has no room for the violence and the horrifying characteristics of the Islamist regime,’ Zand told Fox News Digital.

She said that beneath the surface, Iran’s cultural identity remained intact even after decades of pressure from the state.

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Kristi Noem will reportedly join President Donald Trump and 12 Latin American leaders at his resort in Florida for a ‘Shield of the Americas’ summit Saturday after her ouster as the Secretary of Homeland Security and appointment by President Donald Trump to be special envoy for the new coalition of nations. 

On Thursday, Trump announced Noem would be exiting her role as Homeland Security secretary and would be appointed a Special Envoy for the ‘Shield of the Americas,’ a summit for which will be held at the president’s resort in Doral, Florida, on Saturday. The new coalition of 13 countries has been formed to advance strategies that will tackle mass illegal immigration, narco-terrorist gangs and cartels. 

‘After years of neglect, President Trump established the ‘Donroe Doctrine’ to restore American preeminence in the Western Hemisphere. His efforts have been a tremendous success – our southern border is secure, Latin American countries are working with us to defeat the cartels, and illegitimate dictator Nicolas Maduro is facing justice for his crimes in the Southern District of New York – ushering in historic economic cooperation with Venezuela,’ said White House spokesperson Anna Kelly ahead of the summit. 

‘The President has successfully strengthened our relationships in our own backyard to make the entire region safer and more stable, and this weekend’s ‘Shield of the Americas’ Summit will encapsulate all of his work to Make America, and our partners, Strong Again,’ she continued.

Members of Trump’s Cabinet, including Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth, Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick and United States Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, will also be at the Saturday summit. 

The leaders from other nations who will be present are Argentina’s Javier Milei, El Salvador’s Nayib Bukele Ortez, Bolivia’s Rodrigo Paz Pereira, Costa Rica’s Rodrigo Chaves Robles, Panama’s José Raúl Mulino Quintero, and Trinidad and Tobago’s Kamla Persad-Bissessar, Chile’s Jose Antonio Kast, the Dominican Republic’s Luis Rodolfo Abinader Corona, Ecuador’s Daniel Roy Gilchrist Noboa Azín, Guyana’s Mohamed Irfaan Ali, Honduras’ Nasry ‘Tito’ Asfura, and Paraguay’s Santiago Peña.

Noem confirmed Friday, speaking from Nashville, that she will be at the summit, according to the Associated Press. Noem reportedly added that the president will announce ‘a big agreement’ detailing ‘how we’re going to go after cartels and drug trafficking in the entire Western Hemisphere.’ 

On Friday, Hegseth led a strategic conference in Doral with representatives of 17 different Caribbean, Central American and South American countries throughout the Western Hemisphere. During the conference, they signed a joint security declaration, reaffirming their commitment to peace and sovereignty in the region. According to a source familiar with the plans for the summit, the president plans to celebrate this achievement with attendees.

‘Secretary Noem helped usher in the most secure border in history, deported hundreds of thousands of criminal illegal aliens, and executed record-setting counter-drug operations against cartels. All of this great experience positions Noem well to ensure American preeminence in the entire Western Hemisphere in her new role as Special Envoy to the Shield of the Americas,’ White House spokesperson Olivia Wales said. ‘This historic new security initiative, led by Secretary Noem, will advance cutting-edge strategies to defeat narco-terrorist cartels and stop illegal mass migration to make America and the entire Western Hemisphere safer.’

On Thursday, Rubio said he looked forward to working with Noem as Special Envoy for The Shield of the Americas, and echoed the comments from the White House about her experience.

‘Kristi has achieved incredible results as Secretary of Homeland Security and will be a tremendous asset in our effort to promote security and prosperity in the Western Hemisphere,’ Rubio said on X after Trump named Noem to her new post. 

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While the fate of college sports was being discussed at the White House with the biggest and best of sports and politics, the silent partner of the free-spending, free-falling framework was all but ignoring it. 

ESPN, Fox, NBC and CBS — who combined to throw more than two billion dollars annually at college sports — were more interested in televising the NFL, college basketball, and talk and reality shows. 

Don’t mess with Judge Judy, people. 

Then again, what played out in Washington D.C. wasn’t much different from Judy’s reality show.

In between ideas (some good) from various participants, President Donald Trump — who, to his credit, somehow got all of these iconic individuals together — rambled on about “going back to the old way.”

“I’d like to go exactly back to what we had, and ram it through a court,” Trump said.  

Excuse me, Mr. President? That’s what got us here in the first place. 

It didn’t take long for the two-hour event to devolve into an airing of grievances, an opportunity for those 50-plus at the table to have their moment and their say. Until, that is, Trump had heard enough. 

Right on cue, it became his show again.

He’s issuing a second executive order (the first accomplished nothing), one he says will return college sports to “common sense, and let colleges and players survive and everyone will be happy.”

Says the order will be done in a week, and that it may not hold up in court, but that, “you’re not going to get anything through (Congress).”

And with that, the most powerful man in the free world decided to punt.

Look, I don’t blame him. This thing is an unwieldy mess, and will get zero help from the only body on the planet that’s more tribally dysfunctional than the NCAA: Congress.  

So let’s start with the non-negotiable of the process: No change in college sports begins without some form of antitrust protection for universities. 

Which, of course, is like saying you want to protect the fox while he guards the hen house.

These universities have spent the past five years whining and complaining about a system they built, proclaiming over and over it’s unsustainable. Yet the damn thing keeps printing money. Lots of it. 

But there has to be a starting point, so maybe this is it. Maybe, as Yankees president Randy Levine said, it begins with a two-year antitrust exemption to see if universities can implement an agreement. Or if they screw it up.

If it’s the latter, the whole process begins again from Step 1. 

An antitrust exemption is incredibly university-friendly, allowing those with the money to set rules for those without. Or in this case for players, about 20% of it. 

If universities receive the antitrust exemption, the first thing implemented is a return to restricting player movement. (That voice you just heard was Trump announcing, “Go back to the wonderful system.”) 

SEC commissioner Greg Sankey says his conference wants one free transfer, and that’s it. You know, the old days.

Because free player movement, they insist, leads to structural and financial instability. Leads to an unwinding of the critical thread that makes college sports different and unique from the NFL. Like that matters now.

Forget that the ‘old days’ were awful for players, the financial equivalent of traversing a long, lonely desert — only to have someone eventually offer you a box of cotton balls to quench your thirst. 

Which brings us to former coach Urban Meyer, he of the spotless reputation (both at Florida and Ohio State, and one disastrous year in the NFL). His gift to the day: “Get rid of collectives. That’s cheating!”

Cheating. Imagine that. 

He then tried to explain the machinations of collectives and their cash is king mantra to Trump. Insert your joke here. 

It’s all just so rich.

And speaking of money, very little was said about Cody Campbell’s idea to use the Sports Broadcasting Act of 1961, and allow conferences to pool their media rights and make more money — so everyone can share the wealth. 

The SEC and Big Ten don’t want to pool television media rights, and they certainly don’t want a billionaire businessman — who just so happens to be the president of the Texas Tech Board of Regents — telling them how to financially structure their swindle. I mean, their system.

Early in the meeting, before it was every man and woman for themselves, a football coach said the most important thing of all. Not surprising that it was Alabama legend Nick Saban, who grew up in hardscrabble Monongah, W.V. 

Saban’s dad, Big Nick, once took Saban to the coal mines after Little Nick lost his way one specific day as a teenager. 

Get an education, Big Nick said with a threatening tone, or you’ll end up here. 

Saban began his time at the Trump event by saying he’s just a football coach, and that he’s honored to be in the same room with everyone. Shoot, his big dilemma was always finding an answer to third-and-long.

Then he said it, the most pointed thing of the entire two-hour ordeal. 

“What are the guiding principles for college athletics?” Saban said. “My goal as a coach was to help (players) create value for themselves in life, and prepare them for a future beyond athletics.”

Oh, wait, the players. Yeah, those at the center of this quagmire weren’t invited to the event. Why would they?

They currently have the law (and free player movement) on their side, thanks to a federal judge in ― wait for it ― West Virginia.

No need to punt on third-and-long.

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